[lbo-talk] Strong Religion: The Rise of Fundamentalisms around the World

Michael Pugliese debsian at pacbell.net
Wed Sep 3 06:57:49 PDT 2003


http://www.press.uchicago.edu/cgi-bin/hfs.cgi/00/15387.ctl

Almond, Gabriel A., R. Scott Appleby, and Emmanuel Sivan Strong Religion: The Rise of Fundamentalisms around the World. 296 p., 2 line drawings, 8 tables. 2002 Series: (FP) The Fundamentalism Project

Cloth $49.00tx 0-226-01497-5 Fall 2002 Paper $19.00tx 0-226-01498-3 Fall 2002

After the September 11 terrorist attacks against the United States, religious fundamentalism has dominated public debate as never before. Policymakers, educators, and the general public all want to know: Why do fundamentalist movements turn violent? Are fundamentalisms a global threat to human rights, security, and democratic forms of government? What is the future of fundamentalism?

To answer questions like these, Strong Religion draws on the results of the Fundamentalism Project, a decade-long interdisciplinary study of antimodernist, antisecular militant religious movements on five continents and within seven world religious traditions. The authors of this study analyze the various social structures, cultural contexts, and political environments in which fundamentalist movements have emerged around the world, from the Islamic Hamas and Hizbullah to the Catholic and Protestant paramilitaries of Northern Ireland and from the Moral Majority and Christian Coalition of the United States to the Sikh radicals and Hindu nationalists of India. Offering a vividly detailed portrait of the cultures that nourish such movements, Strong Religion describes different modes of fundamentalism and identifies the kinds of historical events that can trigger them.

For anyone who wants to understand why fundamentalist movements arise and what makes them turn violent, Strong Religion will be essential reading.

"Decades of study here result in what may be the single most cogent sociohistorical analysis of the modern religious phenomenon called fundamentalism."--Library Journal, starred review

Subjects: Religion: Comparative Studies and History of Religion Political Science: Comparative Politics


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-- Michael Pugliese



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